Neal stops himself several times from bringing up his own FBI experience. Malcolm would know that, wouldn't he? He would. He knows about Keller, for god's sake.
When Malcolm pauses, Neal looks around them, taking in the town, the raw spring air. Without thinking about it, his hand strays over to take Malcolm's. He winces and lets go. "Sorry, I'm. I just."
He looks down at Malcolm's hand, feeling squeezed and lonely. "It feels right."
Neal’s stomach does an uncomfortable little somersault. That question is so dangerous. So pointless. He gathers breath to answer, stops, then tries again. Very quietly. Still holding Malcolm’s hand.
“I’m married. We have a kid, or are going to have a kid. Two kids.”
He stares into space thoughtfully. “I…” Do art restoration? Own a gallery? Offer security consultations? “I teach.”
A memory of a case that feels like lifetimes ago surfaces and he smiles. “Art, maybe. Or literature. History. If I’m at a high school maybe I teach all three, who knows.”
He makes an amused noise and shakes his head, then looks at Malcolm. “…What about you?”
Malcolm looks up at him, no guardedness in his expression. No shields.
“I never thought about it. There was no future like that for me in my life at home. I lived for the next case. But…” His voice trails off and he looks at the sidewalk.
He didn’t want to put expectations on Neal, but he also doesn’t want to lie to him. That someone like him came to like Malcolm back was life altering. He can’t pretend it wasn’t.
“It’s not your fault,” Malcolm tells him simply. Matter-of-factly. “I just… I wanted to help you when you got out of medical not… make it difficult for you. Honestly. I’m. I’m here as a…” It catches in his throat. ‘Friend’ doesn’t feel right in his mouth. It’s what he called them when he was helplessly pining for the other man. A facade he put on it for other people so they didn’t feel sorry for him. “….helper,” he finishes weakly.
“That’s what I drink at the coffee shop,” Malcolm murmurs. “Well. The first one is what I drink at the coffee shop. Until you suggested the second one.”
“You don’t eat much,” Neal says, the words unsure. “For… a lot of reasons. You have trouble with it. Don’t like to, really. I’m always looking for little ways to get more into you in a way you’ll enjoy.”
He opens the door, holding it for Neal. Part manners, part a desire to watch him enter, to keep an eye on his face, to look for any hint of a sense of familiarity.
It’s a blink-and-miss-it moment, really, the way Neal pauses at the threshold, hit by a wave of deja vu almost strong enough to be vertigo. His defenses are too high for it to be more than that pause, but it’s there.
He breathes in the smell of the place, the conversations, struck again by another thought that feels random and disconnected. He’s had pretty good luck so far, though.
“Earring,” he murmurs to Malcolm as the other man comes inside. “Something about an earring?”
Malcolm nods, drawing alongside him, standing at his elbow.
"I saw you steal it from a customer that was rude to the barista. She didn't see you steal it, though." He smiles faintly. "I told you you were Robin Hood." A beat. "I told Gil you were Robin Hood when he figured out I was smitten with you."
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When Malcolm pauses, Neal looks around them, taking in the town, the raw spring air. Without thinking about it, his hand strays over to take Malcolm's. He winces and lets go. "Sorry, I'm. I just."
He looks down at Malcolm's hand, feeling squeezed and lonely. "It feels right."
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“It doesn’t make me uncomfortable,” he says softly.
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He looks around again. "I could almost see myself living somewhere like this. In a different life."
Neal flashes Malcolm a crooked little grin.
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“I’m married. We have a kid, or are going to have a kid. Two kids.”
He stares into space thoughtfully. “I…” Do art restoration? Own a gallery? Offer security consultations? “I teach.”
A memory of a case that feels like lifetimes ago surfaces and he smiles. “Art, maybe. Or literature. History. If I’m at a high school maybe I teach all three, who knows.”
He makes an amused noise and shakes his head, then looks at Malcolm. “…What about you?”
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“I never thought about it. There was no future like that for me in my life at home. I lived for the next case. But…” His voice trails off and he looks at the sidewalk.
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“But?”
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He didn’t want to put expectations on Neal, but he also doesn’t want to lie to him. That someone like him came to like Malcolm back was life altering. He can’t pretend it wasn’t.
”With you. Because of you.”
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"I'm sorry," he whispers. "I wish I remembered. I hope I do."
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He pulls Malcolm to a halt, draws him in close and tries for a Disney Prince kiss of his own.
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But he returns it.
When it breaks, he's clutching Neal's bicep more tightly than he realizes. He looks up at his face.
"Does that mean I'm doing okay at it?"
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“Large mocha. Sometimes a turtle mocha, because it’s heavier on the calories. What does that mean?”
He clears his throat, then grins at the ground, though the expression isn’t really heartfelt. “Not that I’m grasping at straws.”
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A pause. “Does… Is that right?”
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It really does, he realizes.
“….You do it all the time, actually.”
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“You want to?”
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Neal instinctively stops that train of thought before it can travel any further toward the loneliness at the end of the line.
When the coffee shop comes into view… he knows it. Maybe. Maybe? Is he just projecting now, hoping the familiarity into existence?
“We met here,” he murmurs experimentally, repeating Malcolm’s words. Willing the specifics to come back.
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"We met here."
He opens the door, holding it for Neal. Part manners, part a desire to watch him enter, to keep an eye on his face, to look for any hint of a sense of familiarity.
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He breathes in the smell of the place, the conversations, struck again by another thought that feels random and disconnected. He’s had pretty good luck so far, though.
“Earring,” he murmurs to Malcolm as the other man comes inside. “Something about an earring?”
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"I saw you steal it from a customer that was rude to the barista. She didn't see you steal it, though." He smiles faintly. "I told you you were Robin Hood." A beat. "I told Gil you were Robin Hood when he figured out I was smitten with you."
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“I’ve never been Robin Hood. I like it, though.”
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